Across rich nations with welfare states, charity continues as a dominant force in the lives of people who are poor. Inadequate state welfare and high housing costs drive people in poverty to seek daily support from charities. Based on in-depth interviews with 24 volunteers providing charity and 57 people receiving charity in Australia, as well as on observations of the provision and receipt of charity in practice, this article examines the experiences and meaning of charity from those who provide and receive it. The analysis shows that people receiving charity feel shame, and this shame derives from the judgements of volunteers and the position of recipients as passively receiving what is given. The findings also show that some volunteers a...
In the United States, public talk about charity for the poor is highly moralistic, even in our era o...
The use of nudge theory by non-governmental organizations and governments as a means to encourage ch...
As a top-ranking country in generosity, our charity-giving habits often fly freely from our wallets....
In advanced industrialized economies, charitable organizations work alongside formal social services...
In advanced industrialized economies, charitable organizations work alongside formal social services...
In this article, we focus on shame among the recipients of charity food aid in Finland. We are inter...
This article concerns the relationship between shame and lived experiences of welfare in Australia, ...
Despite the centrality of shame and stigma within research on welfare in high-income countries, thes...
An increasing number of Australians are experiencing food insecurity due to rising costs of living ...
The thesis includes four main chapters. Each of these chapters tackles with specific hyp...
In my thesis I have looked at the challenges and dilemmas facing volunteers at a Christian charity o...
Reciprocity can, where the exchange is voluntary and altruistic, be an act of kindness, charity or g...
Anthropological analyses of charity are often based on Maussian theories of gift exchange and inequa...
Shame and humiliation are central to the understanding of poverty yet internationally comparable dat...
This article is a reflection on the NSU Winter Symposium of March 2020, entitled ‘Feminism and Hospi...
In the United States, public talk about charity for the poor is highly moralistic, even in our era o...
The use of nudge theory by non-governmental organizations and governments as a means to encourage ch...
As a top-ranking country in generosity, our charity-giving habits often fly freely from our wallets....
In advanced industrialized economies, charitable organizations work alongside formal social services...
In advanced industrialized economies, charitable organizations work alongside formal social services...
In this article, we focus on shame among the recipients of charity food aid in Finland. We are inter...
This article concerns the relationship between shame and lived experiences of welfare in Australia, ...
Despite the centrality of shame and stigma within research on welfare in high-income countries, thes...
An increasing number of Australians are experiencing food insecurity due to rising costs of living ...
The thesis includes four main chapters. Each of these chapters tackles with specific hyp...
In my thesis I have looked at the challenges and dilemmas facing volunteers at a Christian charity o...
Reciprocity can, where the exchange is voluntary and altruistic, be an act of kindness, charity or g...
Anthropological analyses of charity are often based on Maussian theories of gift exchange and inequa...
Shame and humiliation are central to the understanding of poverty yet internationally comparable dat...
This article is a reflection on the NSU Winter Symposium of March 2020, entitled ‘Feminism and Hospi...
In the United States, public talk about charity for the poor is highly moralistic, even in our era o...
The use of nudge theory by non-governmental organizations and governments as a means to encourage ch...
As a top-ranking country in generosity, our charity-giving habits often fly freely from our wallets....